Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 25, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for King or search for King in all documents.

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er that the farmer had been near them again, and that they had heard him say he would no longer trust to his neighbors, but would comb himself the next day, and cut down the crop. "Then," said the feathered philosopher, "it is time to be gone. Per when a man ceases to depend upon others, and takes his affairs into his own hands, his business is pretty sure to be done. " The Confederate States relied upon foreign intervention until they brought themselves to the verge of rain. "Cotton is King," was the cry throughout the Confederacy, and it was received as a dogma altogether incapable of yielding a shadow of doubt. From the dream of security in which they were lulled by the siren song of intervention, they have been aroused by a shock so rude as to convince them at last that it was but a dream. If anything further were wanting to dispel the last shadow of illusion, it has been furnished by the speech of Mr. Yancey, published by us yesterday. He tells us, what it required no res
f the same Government upon slavery and the slave trade, of which she was at one time the principal patron; but, as soon as her interests, changed, the most bitter and efficient adversary. Slavery she forced upon America, to subserve her own interests, and slavery, for the same purpose, she is now laboring to extirpate root and branches. The policy which it is now believed governs Great Britain, will prove as short-sighted as it is supremely selfish and inhuman. Even in the improbable contingency of Southern subjugation, the cotton of the South, if ever raised thereafter, would still hold its supremacy in all the markets of the world. If successful — as who can doubt?--the manufacturers of continental nations would be able, by the use of our Southern staple and by the commercial privileges which they would receive in preference to England, either to overthrow forever the manufacturing ascendancy of that nation, or compel her to acknowledge that the cotton of the South is King.